PBD Podcast - Hells Angels Boss Opens Up - George Christie | PBD Podcast #723
Episode Date: January 22, 2026Patrick Bet-David sits down with former Hells Angels president George Christie to trace the history, code, and culture that defined America’s most infamous motorcycle clubs, from the rise of outlaw ...biker identity to the brutal war with the Mongols, the legacy of Sonny Barger, and how loyalty, violence, and federal pressure shaped - and ultimately fractured - the brotherhood.------
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Always wanted to be an outlaw, not a criminal.
What made Sonny so powerful?
What was his reputation?
Why don't you people go home?
Sunny's a very complicated man.
If it wasn't Sunny's idea, it wasn't a good idea.
No matter if it benefited everybody or not.
If you had a concern for what these people are doing,
to our great nation may provoke violent acts by us.
Sonny saw the club as something that belonged to him.
Other members saw themselves as part of a club.
How did you maneuver your way up to that kind of power?
How can you have respect without fear?
I think you've got to have a little fear.
The bomb, they planned, and didn't go off.
He told me, you're going to go retrieve the bomb that didn't go off.
And I said, why am I going to retrieve it?
I go, I didn't make the bomb.
Be an effective peacemaker, you have to be willing to go to war.
That was kind of my philosophy.
I was strictly for peace, which was a very unpopular position in the album.
How come nobody kills him?
How come he lives to 83?
How does he live to 83?
Well, I think that I'm going to say something here that a lot of people know the Hells Angel history and perhaps are watching this.
Thank you what makes it.
I feel I'm something like it takes sweet the story.
I know this life meant for me.
Adam, what's your point?
Looks bright.
I think I ever signed.
My son's right.
I think I've ever said this before.
George Christie, great to have you on.
Thank you.
I appreciate being here.
Yes, so your story.
I grew up in L.A.
Glenda, we were talking about earlier.
Lendale.
Yes, and La Cresena, Crescenta Valley had a lot of Mongols, Hells Angels,
and one of my friends was part of the gang for 20-plus years.
His name was Jim Pedric.
He's no longer here with us.
And he would always tell me stories, what it was like,
how he got in, the fights, the wars.
You guys had many of them.
A lot of wars, a lot of history.
A lot of histories.
A lot of war.
I want to get into it.
And for you, when you think about Hells Angels, a couple names come up.
We hear Sonny Barker and we hear George Christie.
These are the two names.
Of course, there's other names.
I don't want to say there is.
The club was built on a foundation of many people's input.
But, yeah, that's a fair assessment.
Sonny Barger was my senior.
One of my greatest memories was when he came back from prison and I met him.
I had been in the club.
I was kind of a rising political input in the club, kind of create my own base.
And I went to Oakland on some unrelated business.
One of our members that was a very strong member of Ventura, Irish O'Farrell,
wanted to transfer to Oakland
because Sonny wanted him up there
and ultimately he took Sonny's place
as a leader when Sunny
came down with cancer
but after the end of the conversation
Russell Baye
another Oakland heavyweight
said to me there's someone up the street
that wants to talk to you
I'd like to meet you and I knew who
I knew it was Sunny
and you know
it's like meeting a football star
or a boxing star
We went down at the Sunday's house,
rode our bikes down there.
He came out and greeted us.
I spent several hours in his house talking.
It was just, it was an incredible experience.
This is the first time you met us.
This is the first time I met him.
I knew about him, you know, long before I met him.
I knew about him when I was in high school.
What year is this?
78.
78 first time you met.
First time I met him in person.
Maybe, you know, actually it's probably 77.
And I've been hearing about him since the mid-60s.
especially after Hunter Thompson wrote that book, Hells Angels.
I mean, I felt like I knew him.
How'd you get the book?
Were you in your teens when you read the book?
I was in my teens.
I was always a motorcycle enthusiast.
Always wanted to be an outlaw.
I kind of identified with the outlaw crowd.
Always wanted to be an outlaw.
Always wanted to be an outlaw.
Not a criminal.
But an outlaw.
And there's a distinct difference.
And people get the outlaw and the criminal confused.
and I had my first experience in the mid-50s.
I was with my father,
and we hear this noise up the street,
and I look,
and this guy coming on a chopped Harley,
has a cut-off vest on,
a complete outlaw,
stops at the stop sign,
and when he took off from that stop sign,
I metaphorically jumped on the back of that bike,
and I knew someday I would be like that man.
And it took me 10 years to get there.
But ultimately, I got a bike and started hanging out with independent, as an independent,
with a question mark motorcycle club.
That was a club associated with the Hells Angels.
It was a club associated with Hells Angels.
And then I hung out with the St. Slave's another club.
If you read Hunter Thompson's book, he really talks about the St.
and Slaves a lot in that book because the Hells Angels actually were kind of,
impressed with the saint slaves they were kind of a unique club in san fernando valley and uh they were
kind of the you know sultans of san fernando valley if you will now what did your dad do for your dad to
almost introduce you to this what did he do indirectly well he he was all you know i started talking
about motorcycles after that and he was always tried to play it down unbeknownst to me until i got older
my grandmother, his mother told me he had a motorcycle.
And she had a standing offer of 500 bucks to anybody that pushed it off of the Ventura beer.
It was kind of an inside family joke.
And I don't think she ever thought anybody would take her up on it.
But she wanted to show that she didn't think it was appropriate for him to ride a motorcycle.
And for some reason, he didn't want me to do it, but I did.
Was he also an outlaw or no, was he?
No, he was a former CB,
came, you know, World War II veteran, as my mom was.
My dad was a CB.
My mother was a Marine, both veterans of World War II.
And that was the birth of the outlaw bikers in the United States
and perhaps the world, you know.
It was exclusive to the United States,
and, you know, now it's a worldwide phenomenon.
outlaw motorcycle clubs everywhere.
I don't think there's a continent in the world
that doesn't have some 1% motorcycle club,
whether it be Hells Angels, Banditos, Outlaws, Mongols,
whatever it may be.
What year was it that the whole thing got started?
1948.
I consider that the kickoff date.
And, you know, the guys in the east go,
well, it started back here,
and the guys on the West Coast,
kind of a friendly rivalry.
For me, it started in Hollister,
in 1948.
There was a motorcycle event up there.
The AMA, American Motorcycle Association,
was hosting hill climbs and various races
in the little town of Hollister.
And the Pist Off Bastards,
that's the name of a bike club.
Literally called Pist off bastards.
Pistov bastards.
Can you pull that out front?
The Poo-Bobbs is what they went by.
Poo-Babs.
The Poo-Bobbs.
the galloping goose, the 13 rebels, the booze fighters.
Great names, by the way.
Yeah, these are all veterans.
These are guys that came back from World War II,
from the European and the Pacific theaters,
most likely suffering from undiagnosed PTSD, whatever.
And they felt displaced.
They came home, their life had moved on.
Probably lost their wives, lost a lot of friends overseas.
And they came back and they formed these little motorcycle groups.
And the American Motorcycle Association, that weekend, labeled them the 1% that ruined it for us wholesome riders.
And those individuals at that time embraced that title.
And the rest is kind of history.
We became the 1%ers.
And, you know, ultimately 15 years later, I became part of that.
Pissed off bastards of Bloomington.
Is that correct that it says it started in Riverside?
Yes.
And San Bernardino?
Yes.
Okay, so I know Riverside.
I know San Bernardino.
What else, if we were to talk about the East Coast, West Coast, what's East Coast?
What's East Coast?
West Coast is pretty much northern and Southern California.
And, you know, it's interesting, and I'll get on to the East Coast.
But in the West Coast, there was a tremendous rivalry between all the bikers,
Hells Angels, what other clubs there were in Northern California, the Bay Area specifically,
and then the Southern California, there was this unwritten rivalry.
The East Coast has a similar story.
Detroit, Chicago, you know, these were the Outlaws started.
That was kind of our biggest rivalry.
We had a war with them that still goes on today.
I'm no longer a member, but the two clubs still fight.
And the ironic thing is I realized this morning when I was here,
this is Braward County.
That's where the war started.
Stop it.
They killed Whiskey George and Riverboat.
Whiskey George and Riverboat went to the outlaws clubhouse on an invite.
They were told by Sandy Alexander.
a very powerful Hells Angel from New York City,
don't go to their clubhouse.
And they went there and they were executed
and thrown in some rock quarry around here.
Here in Broad County, yes.
The order came down from Jim Nolan,
who was the leader of outlaws in Florida at the time.
And ultimately, he went to prison for 50 years
for that murder.
You look up Jim Nolan.
He just was released recently.
And I know him.
He knows me.
You know, we've talked to big Jim Nolan.
He's the one that killed.
Well, he ordered.
He made the order.
He ordered.
And how big of a player was Jim at the time?
The biggest.
He was even big in and sunny?
Oh, yeah.
Well, for the outlaws.
That's two separate clubs.
Got it.
For the Hells Angels.
For the Outlaws.
For the Outlaws.
He was what Sunny Barger was for the outlaws.
Got it.
But when you think about biker gangs, you hear, the main name you hear is
Hell's Angels and you hear Mongols.
Of course you got some of the other guys, but.
I think because the Mongols have, and I mean this with all due respect,
have forced their name down the throats of everybody.
I mean, they had, I think they had some leadership,
problems initially in the 70s and the 80s.
I'd think that they weren't prepared.
They brought a challenge to us,
and the Hells Angels rose to that occasion.
I mean, if you look, the Frameup Motorcycle Shop
was a tire taken in there to have worked on
by a Hell's Angel member.
It was a prospective member at the time,
and there was an explosive device.
The tire was filled with dynamism.
the vowsdam actually was a pressure relief trigger and when they took the vowsdam out
tire exploded killed two killed a mongle and it killed his 15-year-old cousin just weeks before that
red bill beard and jingles both mongol officers were killed by a gentleman who went to prison
for it guy castileone out of san die
So by night, the end of 77, the war was just full on with the Hells Angels and the Mongols.
For you, so going back to 68, you know about it, you read the books, you know the stories, you're an outlaw, not a criminal.
And then are you looking at the saying, man, I cannot believe I'm meeting Sunny in 77.
Are you already in Hells Angels?
I am a Hells Angel member, yeah.
So you're a member.
I'm a official member, and I may have been vice president of Los Angeles at the time.
And a few months after that, old man John, who was my mentor, and turned the club over to me.
He told me his exact words were, this is a young man's game.
This is in Ventura.
This is in Los Angeles.
Los Angeles.
So you're not Ventura yet to be the president.
He says, I'm giving this to you.
Okay.
And we're in L.A.
What part of L.
Glendale?
Glendale.
Glendale.
are living in Glendale. The Hells Angel Clubhouse was in Glendale. The Mongols shop, the frame-up,
was in Glendale, I believe, not real close to the Hells Angels Clubhouse, but near. And that's
kind of where the war kicked off in San Diego and in Glendale. Did you live in Glendale yourself?
On and off. I did. I had a apartment down there. I still had a wife and a kid, and I worked.
A lot of people don't know this. I worked for the door.
Department of Defense. While you're part of Hells Angels. While I'm the leader in the
Hells Angels, I had a top security clearance. I worked at Point Magoo in Port
Wenimi at the Pacific Missile Test Center. And at the island of Santa Cruz, there was,
it's been declassified now, so I don't have a problem talking about it. There was a secret
submarine surveillance system on Santa Cruz Island when we were at the midst of the Cold War
with the Russians.
And my job was to maintain that building, make sure it was always up,
along with other responsibilities, because it was a direct line to Washington that if they
saw the subs off there, subs were coming in, someone would have to make a decision in Washington.
They found out that I was a president.
John had turned the club over to me in 1978.
They found out I was the president of the Los Angeles, Hells Angels,
and they brought me in the office and they said,
you can't do this.
This is compromising your top security clearance.
You either go with us or you go with them
because we're going to pull your security clearance
if you don't resign from the Hells Angels.
So they give you the ultimatum.
Yes, and I decided to stay with the Hells Angels.
Why was that? Why did you choose?
Because I was an outlaw.
Because you're an outlaw.
Now let me ask you, while you're doing DOD and you have secret clearance
and your leader at Hells Angels.
Are you using any of the access and information
to help advance Hells Angels?
No, but I certainly used my experience as a Marine.
I was an 0-3-11 rifleman,
and I took my tactical experience,
tactical training,
and applied it in the outlaw motorcycle culture.
How did they recruit you?
What was the original way somebody recruited you?
Into the Hells Angels?
I met Old Man John up on Kern River in the mid, early 70s.
And apparently he saw something in me.
The St. Slaves and the question marks introduced me to John.
He invited me to the Glendale Clubhouse.
That's how to happen.
Just fell into it, yeah.
And did they see something in you?
Did they say this guy's got what it takes?
We like him?
Like, what was the recruiting?
I think John, you know, not trying to shine the light too much on me,
but I think John saw something in me, saw the discipline.
John being ex-military himself, understood that we were running in a group of a bunch of
undisciplined guys that needed, you know, somebody to be the patriarch, if you will,
of this little clan of Hells Angels and Los Angeles.
So at the time, when you got recruited, what yours is it?
74, 70.
75.
Okay, so 75 you get recruited.
How were you at 75?
I was mid-20s.
Mid-20s.
So let's say 25 years old and 75.
How did you go from a rookie guy coming on board to 78 going to Sunny's place?
You rode up with bikes and motorcycles you hit up to him.
And then all of a sudden to be the number two guy, conciliary, president of Ventura County,
how does that happen?
How did you maneuver your way up to that kind of power?
Well, maybe the Forrest Gump of the outlaw bike world.
Not what I hear about you.
They tell me you're the intellectual.
They told me you're the strategic, you're the brains,
you were the guy that was extremely intentional, you know, strategic.
You know, like, you know, when you think about the original mobsters,
you think about what Ben Siegel did, what Frank Costello, who was a networker,
great at going and creating the relationship.
You know, you have a Lucky who was more.
more the visionary, what he saw he can do.
But then it was Meyer Lansky.
Meyer Lansky was like the brains.
It's like, what if we do this and what if we do that?
So you've been compared to some interesting people.
Well, you know, it's interesting.
Julian Scheer wrote the book,
Hell's Angels, Angels of Death, I think it's called.
And in the book, he says, you know,
law enforcement perceives you as the Al Capone of Venturi.
As the Al Capone?
Yeah, he goes, how do you take that?
And I said, well, I'm going to take it as a compliment.
So I'm so funny.
What else could you do, you know?
I'm honored.
Thank you so much for this compliment.
Yeah.
You know, that's the book there.
Inside the Bikers' Global Criminal Empire is, they're investigative reporters from Canada.
And he, you know, he came to the house.
He was very pensive.
He says, I want to interview you.
And I had permission from the club.
I could do any interviews I wanted.
I said, if you want to interview me, you have to come to the house.
At that time, how powerful are you?
Probably at the peak of my power.
Really?
So this is early 2000s, early to mid-2000s.
2002 or 2003.
We just had the shootout at Laughlin in the casino at Harris Casino.
And I thought it was kind of balty of him, you know.
And I did it as being kind of a smart ass.
I go, you want to interview me, Julian?
He said, yeah, I said, well, you'll have to come to my house.
And I didn't think he'd come.
And he came.
and he actually came and he
when the book came out he brought me a book
and he signed it Julian Cher
and he put to my favorite angel of death
so I don't know whether that was a compliment
Did you feel he was nervous or did you feel he was poised in a cop?
I think he was pensive and then I think he
became relaxed at that time I was living
in a house that had been in my family for 100 years
It had been my grandfather bought it when he came from Greece.
So you're not living a lavish lifestyle.
No, I lived in the same house.
But it was very unique.
It was like a museum within the house.
And I think as he spent the afternoon there, he became very relaxed.
And it was interesting.
He also went to Sunny Barger's.
Sunny invited him to his house.
And he showed up at Sunny's house in Arizona.
So he interviewed myself in my house and interviewed Sunny at his house.
and interviewed Sunny at his house.
At this time, are you and Sonny good?
Because I know later on.
No, we're getting ready.
And the book is part of the problem with the falling out.
Oh, you got to be kidding me.
So the book, okay, so not let's go back because I want to know.
So think about it from this standpoint.
Because I think the game of power happens in politics, happens in outlaws,
happens in the mob, happens in business, happens in sports.
It happens everywhere, right?
where, you know, somebody you look at it.
I know Sonny Francie's, you know Michael Francis as well.
I was in prison with him.
Really?
I don't know.
You guys had time together.
Yeah.
I don't know that.
Yeah, in 1986.
So Michael would always tell me his dad said to him,
Michael, be careful with the young guys.
Right.
And he says, why did that?
It's just because the young guys that are coming up
are one day going to be the bosses.
Right.
So he says, be careful because that could happen.
You want to make sure they'll remember how you treated them
when they had little to no power.
And, you know, I'll add something else.
Sometimes they don't care.
The young guys.
Yeah.
They get up there, they're sitting on top.
You know, they're making decisions.
You know, is this guy going to help me?
Is this guy going to hurt me?
What should I do with this guy?
And the decisions like that are made in the club.
You know, the club's not really supposed to be structured like that.
But people have human frailties.
And, you know, egos.
We all do.
Power, whatever it may be.
but Sonny and I were on great terms,
and then I started,
I had a different vision than Sunny had for the club.
What you have to understand is back in 1989,
the Fed's 88, 89, the Fed sent a gentleman named Anthony Tony Tate
to set Hells Angels up.
He had been a Hells Angel.
Great name.
Anthony Tony Tate.
Anthony Tony Tate.
And if you look him up, you'll see he was FBI in front.
But he was also a hell's angel.
And, you know, Sonny Barger wound up buying into him, got convicted, conspiring to commit murder with him, went to prison for almost four years in Arizona.
And Sonny had made a very tactical mistake.
What he did was he had introduced, as this Tony Tates making his rise in power, he had, interested, he had,
introduced him as the
Hells Angels of the future.
And it turns out he's enough behind him.
So Tony Te, was like a Joe Pistone,
Donny Barrasco.
Exactly.
And how long was he in there?
How long was he?
Right from the beginning,
he'd been in the club, probably four years.
Four years?
Undercover.
So 85.
Yeah.
85, 83, maybe.
I think 85 most likely.
And then when he came, who brought him in?
Did Sonny bring him in?
Well, not really, but Sonny embraced him.
Got, and with Sonny embraces,
you get all the power?
Yeah, absolutely.
How did you come up?
as a young guy. How did you get the power?
Kind of just fought my way.
I have a
saying in one of my books,
to be an effective peacemaker,
you have to be willing to go to war.
And that was kind of my philosophy.
I was strictly for peace,
which was a very unpopular position
in the outlaw bike world,
because everybody's aggressive in that world
and they thrive off of egos and whatnot.
but, you know, it can be vicious.
The political arena is very dangerous in the Hells Angels,
as it is in organized crime.
Political, political, or, you know, Democrats and Republicans,
whatever it may be, you know.
Were you more feared, respected, or liked?
Well, I don't know.
You know, I really, really don't know.
I think there was,
How can you have respect without fear?
I think you've got to have a little fear.
What do you think is more important between the three, especially in that world?
Probably applies to everything else as well.
Probably fear.
Fear?
Fear, number one.
Yeah, I think so, and I'm just being honest.
I don't know if I've ever said that publicly before, but people fear you.
It gives you the sword to wield around because they go, this guy's armed with the sword,
and he will use it if he has to.
How did you gain fear?
has a reputation because you said the only way to be a peacemaker, you have to be willing to go to war.
So how do you gain that level of fear that people don't even want to go to war with you?
Well, some of its anticipation, some of its legend, some of its gossip.
You know, anybody that does anything illegal in the right mind doesn't talk about it.
And I think sometimes unspoken words are louder than people screaming it, you know.
But how do you build that reputation, though?
I mean, you've got to build it, right?
I mean, there's got to be, because, like, for example, you know,
you look at Trump is like, if you do this, I'm going to bomb Iran.
And Iran's like, last time he said this, he killed our number two guy, right?
So you got to almost believe him.
So how did you build that fear for people to say when George says something,
he's going to follow through?
That's a hard question to answer.
We like asking hard questions.
I know you do.
And you're asking them well.
But I don't think I want to go.
go any deeper than I, you know, my daughter's an attorney. And every time I come to do a,
she tells you, you don't do it, every time I come to do an interview by someone, you know,
I know you like to ask the hard questions. And she gives me a little pep talk and a lecture.
And so she always told me, you know, dad, you can always take the fifth.
But maybe share what has already been told that is not like it's going to be held against you.
What is public information that you've already done the crime that you can share?
Well, I'm going to share this with you.
Was it a crime?
Perhaps it was a crime.
It was more of a journey and an appointment to do something.
A lot of people think once you get in the Hells Angels,
that you're prospecting or the time when they evaluate what your worth is
doesn't end when you become a member.
And when I became a member, there was a bomb planted, there was two bombs planted at the frame-up.
The first bomb didn't go off.
And I walked in on an impromptu meeting of these gentlemen talking about conspiring to blow that up.
And I explained, I'd just come out of the Marines.
I worked for the DoD at the time.
And I was explaining collateral damage to him.
I said, you know, you put a bomb somewhere, you've got no control over the casualties.
you know, it was called collateral damage.
And a couple of the guys didn't even know
what collateral damage was.
They were very offended that I told them.
I thought they were taking the wrong approach
to this war with the Mongols.
I left the meeting.
I said, I don't want anything to do with this.
You know, this is, you know.
You're a member.
I'm a member.
I said, I don't want to talk about this.
This is when you're still with the DOD.
Yes, I'm with the DOD.
So late 20s.
I'm a hell's angel.
Yeah, late 20.
I'm a Hell's Angel leader at the time.
I think, no, I wasn't.
I was just voted in as a member.
But they didn't like the position I took.
The bomb they planted didn't go off.
And Old Man John called me, said, I want you to come down here.
I want to talk to you.
And I went to Oman John, and he told me,
you're going to go retrieve the bomb that didn't go off.
And I said, why am I going to retrieve it?
I go, I didn't make the bomb.
I don't even know what kind of trigger mechanisms on it.
I don't know anything.
And I said, I'm not going to talk to those guys about it.
And he said, well, some people are starting to have second thoughts about you
because you questioned us taking the posture of war.
And he said, you're going to go get it.
And then you're going to take it to a place that we called the armory.
In downtown Los Angeles, this is no secret.
The police found it.
We had 2,000 pounds of dynamite, a British shanty tank, rifle, machine guns, pistols and silencers.
He said, you're going to take it.
Retrieve the bomb.
It was like maybe eight sticks of dynamite or whatever it was.
He said, you're going to retrieve the bomb.
You're going to take it back and leave it there.
And the guys that built it will come and dismantle it.
And because I wouldn't do it.
I think acts like that make people realize.
that, you know, you're sincere. I mean, I basically went over, retrieved a bomb that I didn't know
what went wrong. I didn't know how it was put together. I didn't know who put it together.
And retrieved it and took it back to the armory and left it. You know, people start talking about
stuff like that. This guy had the nerve to go get that bomb and get it. You know, another situation
was we talked about the outlaws a little bit earlier. When I decided I wanted to end the war or
tried to end the war between the outlaws and the Hells Angels. I showed up at Taco Bowman's
motel room unannounced 15, 20 outlaws there. And, you know, they'd already killed several
Hells Angels. And I just, I showed up there. I said, I'm here to talk to you about peace. And he just
kind of shook his head. He goes, he'd just show up here. And I said, well, I knew you were here.
And I wanted to talk to you. And I think acts like that.
where you put the club interest before your own.
It creates interest in you.
Members will be willing to follow you.
This guy goes, you know, he puts his money where his mouth is.
To me, those two things would make me like you and respect you, but not fear you.
Okay.
Because, you know, you're not giving up, are you?
No, I'm not.
No, and I'm saying that because, you know, like if I talk to Sammy,
and you hear why
Sammy maybe was feared in the streets
or Leonetti would tell stories about Nikki Scarfo
and I had Leonetti on the podcast
he flew in and we did an interview together
six years ago
there were some of these guys that were enforcers
that put the fear of death on other people
well maybe let me ask a different question
when you first met Sunny
and you said you had read about him in 68
so you kind of knew that he was a
outlaws somebody serious guy what were the and you said something earlier you said you know it's
reputation legends right legends that people talk because when you commit a crime you don't typically
talk about it so you still have to find a way for people to find out what you did and how ruthless
you are there's benefit for people knowing you're a bit ruthless in that world yes in that world
and maybe the legitimate world in the legitimate world as well in business as well as well as in
politics. There is no question.
In military, you need a little bit of that.
What made Sonny
so powerful? What was
his reputation?
Well, I think there's
a history of missing
members, members that are
dead.
Nobody
knows. They're unsolved murders.
People speculate.
I have some inside information
because
Paul, Animal
Hibbitts was a very powerful Oakland Hells Angels. Allegedly, and according to Paul, when I asked him
about it, he had hot shot in Terry the Tramp for Sonny's orders, behest of Sonny. Sunny didn't like
him. He was jealous of him for whatever reason. I think that people in the club didn't talk about
but people knew, you know, that Sonny had ordered that.
Stort turned up missing.
There was another member.
His name escapes me.
Allegedly had stolen a coin collection from Sunny, you know.
A member.
A member, yeah.
He was killed.
So, you know, these things happen.
You know, Russell Bay, I mentioned him earlier.
I told him he was a very powerful member.
Well, his expiration date came up one day.
Somebody walked up to his door.
and shot him nine times.
Nobody knows really.
I mean, people narrowed it down to Irish O'Farrell and to Sergei Walton.
They were the, one of these guys shot him is what everybody figured out.
You know, despite what people think, you know, Sammy the Bull has a luxury now of made a deal with the government.
I'm not judging that that's his business, whatever he wants to do.
but he has immunity now
and he talks about crimes he did
or perhaps crimes he didn't do
freely because he's got to deal with the government
people in that world I lived in
nobody knew
for sure who shot Russell Baye
was it Irish or was it Sergei
who's Irish who's Sergei
they're both dead
They're both dead.
Irish was murdered.
Sergei crossed Sunny, and I think there was a hit ordered on him.
I write about it in my latest book.
There was a hit on him in prison, and he went to witness protection program.
This is Sergei.
Sergei.
So he still around.
No, Sergei passed away a couple of years ago.
Naturally.
Naturally.
Yeah.
Irish was murdered in 1989.
right after Sonny and him were convicted of the conspiracy to kill the outlaws that was set up by Tony Tate.
It gets very convoluted and complicated.
You almost need a program to follow these situations that happen.
When you profile different leaders, you'll see different way they are.
Like you'll say, ooh, that guy's extremely jealous.
He is extremely envious if anybody else gets more attention than me.
that guy is just flat out ice cold ruthless okay he's a deal maker as long as he makes money he's happy
he's not killing nobody that guy is you know extremely brilliant strategic and you know he's the kind
of guy that'll look at you face and smile and you'll walk away saying i just had a great meeting with bobby
30 minutes later you and he shoots you in the head right so what was sunny what was his profile because you've spent a lot of time
with them.
You know,
Sunday's a very complicated man.
I'm going to give you an example of,
if it wasn't Sunny's idea,
it wasn't a good idea,
no matter if it benefited everybody or not.
I had been trying to resolve the Nordic bike war,
the banditos and the Hells Angels
were fighting in the Scandinavian countries.
And they were very well equipped.
And I, you know,
I know it's difficult.
It can be difficult to get guns in some of the European countries.
And I was, how are these guys getting these rocket launchers?
They're shooting rockets in each other's clubhouses.
They're armed with automatic weapons, handguns, grenades and whatnot.
Well, I find out that each town has a militia.
And at the end of the town, there is a armory.
And the armory is secured with just a.
padlock. So these clubs are going around popping these paddollocks and they're
arming themselves. I had negotiated with George Weggers, who was, he's no longer alive.
He was the international leader of the banditos at the time. We were at odds with each other
when we first started negotiating. I became very close friends with him as time passed.
and we negotiated a piece between the Hells Angels and the Banditos in Europe.
We were doing it for selfish reasons.
We didn't want the war to bleed into the United States
because it would have just been a mess.
And my position was it was just something that the feds would have loved.
You know, we're in the United States now killing each other.
I've always had suspicion at some point in time
the government is going to go after all these motorcycle clubs Indonesia
and their trademarks and whatnot.
And that was one of the things that I was worried about.
But I had negotiated with George Weggars.
George Weggers and I were on great terms, great relationship.
And George Weggers and I made an agreement.
And he had mapped out a map with a United States map
and mapped out an area and then signed it.
And he said,
as long as he was the leader of the banditos, this would be the area they wouldn't encroach on our areas.
We had an area marked out.
I took that map to the meeting, to officers' meeting, and Sonny was there, and I petitioned him to come with me to this meeting.
I said, let's all agree to this here in the room.
It was all filled with Elshel presidents.
I go, let's agree to this.
Let's go meet George Weggers together with his delegation of banditos.
And I said, let's secure this.
And I go, this is good for the Hells Angels.
And I said, if Sonny Barger walks into that room with me, I go, they'll give me whatever we want.
And he thought about it.
He wouldn't give me an answer.
And so I shelved it.
At the end of the meeting came, I said, Sonny,
what are we going to do?
You're going to come?
And he goes, you know what?
I'm not going.
And I said, why?
I go, this benefits to the Hells Angels.
Why won't you go?
And he told me, he goes,
because I just don't like them.
And he was willing to keep the war going,
to create more conflicts.
My position was I didn't want to see any more
Hells Angels in court,
ultimately in prison,
or finally in a graveyard.
and he didn't care.
That's the attitude
son he had, and people knew it.
And if you crossed him,
you didn't know what he was going to do.
Terry the tramp,
Harry the horse.
I mean, these are people up store it.
These are people that,
they're still unsolved murders.
It's now, this stuff happened in the 70s.
If you look, the decade of the 70s
was very difficult for Hells Angels.
There's a lot of unsolved murders still.
To this day, they're not solved.
Tiny's the guy's 6-6, 350 pounds.
He vanishes in the thin air.
The tough guy to vanish.
Yeah, a big guy to vanish.
So when you have acts of violence like this,
whether real or imagined, you know, did Tiny disappear or did he...
What was Tiny's name, Tiny?
I just knew him by Tiny.
That's it.
That's it.
And it was in Hell's Angels.
He was a Hells Angel.
He was Vice President of...
Rob, can you see who? Tiny Hells Angels 6-6.
Oakland.
Oakland.
Because there were three tiniies on the Hells Angels.
Go to images?
Yep.
Is it Tiny Walters?
Yep, that's him.
6-6.
Famously vanished after the 1969 film.
Hells Angel 69.
Can you pull up his image, Rob?
Let's see what he looks like.
He fell on one of the Oakland protesters,
When Sunny and the Oakland Hells Angels
went to disrupt the Vietnam Peace March,
Tiny fell on one of the...
There he is right there on the lower left-hand corner.
There he is.
He fell on one of the Oakland police officers
and broke his leg.
He didn't do it intentionally.
It was just...
That's how big he was.
So he disappears.
He disappears.
So Sonny, can you pull up Sunny's picture
so we can see what he looks like?
Sonny lived a full life.
He died at 83.
It's not like he...
Yeah.
That's sunny right there.
Born October 8th, 1938.
So the first time you meet him when you roll up to his place, 1978,
you've been there now for four years.
You've been to remember.
And when you walk up to him, see him for the first time,
what was he talking to you about?
What was your impression of him?
Were you impressed where you're like,
oh, my God, I can't believe I'm meeting my hero?
We talked about the war with the Mongols.
Okay.
Talked about my political rise.
he had an interesting philosophy.
Not that particular day, but in the future day,
we start talking about members.
And he said, you have a pretty good run here, George.
He goes, you know, you came a long way fast.
And he goes, you know, a lot of these guys,
he goes, they come here.
He goes, I let them burn themselves out.
He goes, just filler for us.
And I said, well, you know, I said,
I don't really want to take that posse.
or about a brother.
And that was how he saw people.
He didn't care.
People were expendable to him.
And it's, you know, it's obvious by the things that happen.
Tiny was a, he was part of Hell's Angels 69 in that movie.
Terry the Tramp was very popular in that movie, Hells Angels 69.
Terry the Tramp was a very flamboyant.
And he kind of stole the show in Hell's Angel 69.
he wound up with a hot shot, you know what a hot shot is.
Hot shot, if somebody has a propensity to use narcotics,
like to shoot them intravenously,
you can mix up a special concoction,
and they shoot themselves with it,
and it collapses their lungs,
and they wind up,
Odeen is what they do,
and that's how tiny died.
Animal, I got off track.
Paul, Animal Hibbitts, and I,
He confessed to me in 19, probably 77 or 78, that he, he was there when the hot shot was given to Terry.
He was there present when it was given to him.
He was present, yeah.
Who gave it to him?
Was it a shot coming from Sunny?
Well, it came from Sunny.
Sunny wasn't there.
He sent over Animal.
An animal never told me who was accomplished accomplice was, I was told later,
that it was Bobby Dirt that had assisted him.
You guys know how to pick names.
Yeah, we got some names.
Legit names.
And you know, I want to tell you a funny story,
and then we'll get back on this.
In court in 2002,
Bobby Dirt.
Bobby the Dirt.
In 2002,
a judge,
Superior Court judge of Ventura ruled that
it was perfectly
realistic to think
that Hells Angels only went by monikers
because the district attorney was saying,
I want to know their exact names.
I said, I don't know his name.
You know?
Didn't you imagine?
What's your name, by the way?
Honestly, I forgot my own name.
I just know.
And how convenient.
Yeah.
In a military, we used to call each other
by our last name.
When I was in the Army, it was not,
like you would talk to Mendoza.
I'm like, what's your first name?
We don't even know your first name.
It's always last name.
David Jones, Mendoza, Tucker,
It was always the last thing we'd go by.
So, will you meet him the first time, I'm 78?
For how long did you guys have a good relationship together?
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It was on and off.
The first time I defied him was, I want to say, early 80s.
And he had gotten mad.
He had petitioned me to go talk to a group of guys.
He wanted a guy back in the club that had been pushed out.
a gentleman by the name of Rotten Richard.
There's another...
Rotten Richard.
Rotten Richard.
And he wanted him back in the club.
And Sonny sent me as an emissary to go talk to this group of people.
And it kind of has an ironic ending at the meeting.
We have this big meeting.
And the guys say he'll never, ever be back in the Hells Angels, ever.
and Sonny publicly is starting,
people are starting to publicly argue with Sunny,
which I think that's something that didn't happen a lot.
And Sonny said, well, you know what, man,
you guys are making a big mistake because he's a good dude.
And these guys said, no, he's rotten.
That's why he got the name, Rotten Richard.
And they didn't want him back in the club.
He had been involved in a double homicide,
at a Hells Angel Clubhouse.
Killing members?
These were two gentlemen that came from either Georgia or Texas, I can't remember.
And they wanted to become Hells Angels.
And we used to have what we call the acid test.
You give people LSD.
They'll talk.
They'll talk.
See how they hold their mud.
And one of the guys went over the deep end,
and they were trying to restrain him.
They killed him accidentally.
and so what did they do with his partner, you know?
And the order came down.
Well, one guy's got to go, the other guy's got to go.
They went up killing two.
Hells Angels.
There was a gentleman named Whispering Bill Pfeiffer that had throat cancer.
And he got arrested for something unrelated along with his son.
And he said, how'd you like to solve a couple of murders?
and he directed them to go to George Baby Huey Weatherin's house and his ranch,
and he said, check the well.
At the bottom of the well, you're going to find two bodies.
And they were the gentleman that got killed at the clubhouse
and then taken and buried in this burial ground, I think, is how they described it.
Now, you talk about the Mongols earlier,
what started the conflict with the Mongols.
One of the people, you had Whisper and Bill Pfeiffer,
but you had an additional informant, Chester Green.
He was a Hells Angel as well.
He gets kicked out of the club for testifying against other members.
You cannot do that, yeah.
The Golden Rule.
Instead of going into the witness protection program like Whisper and Bill did,
he goes down to Long Beach and becomes a Mongol.
and that was part of the problem between the Hells Angels and the Mongols.
The cops always say it started over the California Bottom Rocker.
That was just part of the problem.
You know, you've got Chester Green,
a former Hells Angel Bay Area member who testified against the Hells Angels.
Now, as a Mongol member, you've got a Bud Green,
his brother, runs off with a Hells Angels,
Chester right there
runs off with a
Hells Angels
ex-wife
That's never good
That's never good
And so
He gets killed
No he winds up
The first night
We had a physical problem with the Mongols
The Hells Angels
And Bud Green
See each other
Never
never said a word of one hell's angel hits bud green a fight breaks out and it's uh 60 hells angels
fighting uh excuse me 60 models fighting nine hells angels we've gotten this fight the reason they had
such an accurate count is one of the hell's angels with us is also a government informant
so his handlers were at that fight god and they reported 60 to nine
Yes. And what they had to make a split decision, do we intercede and blow the cover or do we let them fight it out? And they chose to let them fight it out.
Anybody get killed or? No. A rookie cop came into the middle of the fight with a six-shot revolver. I remember looking at his gun. I was there. I remember looking at his gun. And I'm thinking, well, he's only got six shots.
but I don't think
63 of us will make it
Yeah, but I
He broke up the fight
And a pretty brave police officer
I mean, you hear you got
This is what city
This is where
This is in Orange County
What part?
We're in Orange County
I don't know
It was at the Great Western exhibit
It's one of these places
And what was going on
Was a new event
We're starting
They were called Spike Swat
swap meats and that's what it was it was a bike swap meat you know which I thought was a
terrible idea because they have these bans they have all these motorcycle parts on the floor
and they're selling beer and everybody's bringing in whiskey and pouring whiskey into their beer
it was just a yeah it was a recipe for disaster you know and so is this is this where
you're seeing at what point are you like I don't know if I like the sunny guy and I don't know
know if, you know, I can align with them. And you guys have two different ways of doing things.
You know, you kind of want to make it, you know, an independent, decentralized way of running.
He wants to run like an empire.
Yeah. Let me tell you something. You said something really interesting, you know.
I never really made up my mind. You know, sometimes I loved him. Sometimes I hated him.
You know, he was like family to me. He was a mentor to me. I didn't agree with him.
You know, him and I got in an argument one time, and he told me, he goes, you know what, George?
He goes, I burn every bridge I cross.
He said that?
Yeah, he told me that.
He said, I burn every bridge I cross.
And I said, well, you know, as a military man and an ex-department defense worker, I said, I think I would leave at least one bridge for supplies or for retreat, depending on the situation.
And he said, no, I don't care.
And I think, ultimately, I think Sonny saw the club.
as something that belonged to him.
Other members saw themselves as part of a club.
And I think that's a distinction as leaders.
Sonny didn't make that distinction.
The club was his, as far as he was concerned.
Terry the tramp outshines him in a movie,
give him a hot shot, you know, get rid of that guy.
That's unbelievable.
Yeah, it is, but it's the truth, you know.
Was he a gambler?
Was he a drinker?
Was he a womanizer?
What was his thing?
He had a weakness for women, but he didn't chase women.
I never saw him chasing women, but I'll tell you a little story.
He was taken to an underground nightclub in the Bay Area where there was live sex acts being performed.
And he fell in love with the star of the show.
So I've been warned not to talk about her.
So there's a life performance going on.
Yeah, he falls in love with the girl.
You know who John McAfee is?
Yeah, John McAfee is.
Sure, yeah.
He died in Spain.
He died in Spain.
Do you know his latest wife, how he fell in love with his wife?
Do you know this story?
I have no idea, but I bet you're enlightened me right now.
If I tell you this story, you will not, I don't even know if I want to tell this story.
Rob, do you know the story or no?
You're shaking your head like you know this story?
Yeah.
What's the story, Rob?
The hammocks?
So he goes, he pays her as a prostitute
to please him.
And he walks out, he says, this is the greatest eye.
He says, they asked him, said,
when did you know you were going to marry her?
He says, I've never met anybody
that gave me as good of a BJ as she did.
That's when I knew she was my wife.
So you're saying to me,
Sonny was kind of like a John Mackey.
Perhaps. You know, I'm going to tell you this. He did wind up marrying that girl.
Stop it. No, he did wind up marrying that girl. Did he kill the other guy that was performing?
I don't know what happened to him. But he did marry the girl. They moved to Arizona together.
And it was revealed in, I'm going to say, 2002 or 2003, not only was sending her estranged ultimately.
Is this Z? Is this? No, this is not Z. This is not Z.
This is Noel.
I know Noel as well.
Okay.
I've read about her.
She was a paid FBI informant.
Noel was?
Yes.
So was Z?
Well, I think Z was, but I don't have proof.
I have my gut.
So wait, Noel is the one that's doing live performance and was an informant?
Yeah.
Well, she became an informant.
She was getting paid $1,000 a week to give information to the FBI.
Wow.
He had no clue.
He had no clue.
Well, I hope he didn't.
You say maybe he did.
And he was, was he an informant or no, himself?
Well, you know, nobody, there's people that speculate now,
and I think it's unfair to do that.
He's not here.
I don't, you know, there are people out there that say that he did inappropriate things.
Rob, what are you doing there with Tony Robbins' event of the,
there is no affiliation between the two.
There may be.
And we may uncover it right now.
No, but what, is that her?
Yes, sir.
That's Noel in the middle.
Okay. So she's very attractive. And this was his wife?
Yes.
So they get married. Yes.
And you met Noel?
Yes.
How was she to you when you meet her?
Very cordial. But you know, you have to understand there's a rule, you know.
And you mess with somebody's lady in the Hells Angels.
You get not only kicked out. God only knows what else happens.
And, you know, Iverson Farrell was the one that said.
he made a comment you know he said there's only a couple of hundred women you can't chase in the
united states he goes it's not that hard and somebody said maybe they should wear a black armband
what a great line though you know you got a hundred women to choose from just leave these 200 alone
yeah so you know so there was a woman uh i can't think of her name it's the phoenix magazine
she did a very provocative story.
Sunny had a
sunny liked attention.
Him and I got in a big argument one time.
He did an interview in Rolling Stone magazine.
Unbeknownst to him,
Rolling Stone magazine really didn't like the Hells Angels
after the Altamont incident.
And he did this story in Rolling Stone,
very provocative about murders,
there you go.
1972.
Well, no, this is a
1979
Masters of Menace.
Michael Douglas is on the cover,
if I recall correctly.
Mine's not as sharp as it used to be,
but I,
Masters of Menace
and it's...
Is that it?
That's it?
Seventy-9.
This infamous gang
has traded its colors
and cycles for dark suits
and Lincoln Continentals.
What do they mean?
Well, I never drove a Continental.
I drove a Cadillac.
You did?
I'd rather have a Cadillac than a Continental.
There you go.
Yeah, any day of the week.
El Dorado, thank you.
You know, he did that article,
and he did it without permission of the club,
and, you know, this is one of the first times
I confronted him in the meeting.
I said, you know, Ralph,
I said, if you would have followed a protocol
and brought it up in the meeting here,
I go, you would have realized,
he didn't read Rolling Stone.
magazine. I said you would have realized that since Altamont, there's been a series of negative, you know,
stories from these Rolling Stone investigating reporters. I'm sorry, that's Sunny's name. That's what I called
him. That's what I called him. But that's his real name. That's his real name. Hey, Ralph. And, you know,
how long did it take on to you guys at that kind of a relationship? You meet him 78. When did you guys
become super close? Probably in 1982.
when he said, I'm dying at cancer, and he goes,
I want you and Irish to take over.
And Irish was a Los Angeles Hells Angel.
Now, Irish was now a very powerful Oakland Hells Angel who took Sonny's place.
So Irish and I had a special relationship that if Sonny maybe had done a little bit more vetting,
he would have understood our relationship.
We were very close.
Irish and I had an inside joke that,
Sonny was so big and so popular that it took two of us to replace him.
Because he turned over, he said,
George, you and Irish are going to do the interviews from now on.
They're cutting my voice box out.
I'm not going to be able to communicate.
You know he had cancer, correct?
They cut out his voice box, and he had to learn to talk again.
How bad was it?
They didn't think he was going to make it.
But was he able to communicate?
He did, yeah. He yelled at him more than once with that voice box. He placed his thumb over the box, and he could generate, you know, certainly mechanical voice, but to me, sounded like Sonny's voice. It was still sounded like Sonny's voice. I knew Sonny's voice. Commanding.
It was very commanding, and he would just, the baines in his neck would pop out from straining. And I think you can,
there's some stuff on the internet you can hear him and he very seldom did interviews after that
I talked him into doing a interview in 2000 no 1988 or 89 called In Search of the Hells Angels
and Sonny and I were the host of this show it's uh we hadn't done a big TV show in a long time
and we were on the show Hunter Thompson was on the show uh
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There's something right there talking.
Which show is this?
This is in search of the Hells Angels, I think.
Let me see it, Rob.
Another thing with Tucker Rocky advertising their clothing,
and that in that in their book,
that hell's feet us.
but I don't have any one bit thing that makes me a lot of money.
Is he a smoker?
A lot of little things.
And then became an advocate for not smoking.
After this?
Really.
How dramatic did he change after he got cancer?
Did he change it to become softer?
Did it become more gentle?
Did he become more?
No, he seemed like he hadn't changed the damn bit.
I'll tell you the tenacity on this guy.
You figure he comes back from prison in 94, maybe, 93.
I can't remember exactly.
He does four years.
He goes back to Oakland and he's, I want to do this.
I want to do this.
I want to do this.
He gets shut down because what you have to understand,
here's the guy that, how good is his judgment?
He's the guy that said Tony Tate was the Hells Angels of the Future
and he decimated, you know, the Oakland charter.
Chico goes to jail for 40 years.
Kenny Owens goes to jail for 41 years.
Cruzy does 18 years, gets deported as soon as he gets out.
So you have all these things that impacted the charter because Sonny endorsed somebody.
And, you know, perhaps it's not fair for me to lay it out that way.
But that's the facts and that's the truth.
but he packs up and goes to Arizona and starts over.
This guy's 70 years old and he packs up, goes to Arizona,
turns the dirty dozen into Hells Angels.
So now he's got a complete state that he's completely dominant of.
Does he take Noel with him or is he with Z at this point?
He takes Noel with him.
How loyal do Noel stay to him?
him. Well, she took a thousand dollars a week from the FBI. I'm talking loyal like other
man, like, you know, trained. Oh, I think she was loyal to him. She was loyal to him. Yeah, I think she was
absolutely loyal to him. That's respect. At least she was loyal. That's good. Yeah.
Except with $1,000 a week from the FBI. Yeah. So when Noel's going through that and he's going
through his son, if he's doing so much harm to everybody, how come nobody kills him? How come he
he lifts to 83? How does he live to 83? Well, I think that,
I'm going to say something here that a lot of people know the Hells Angel history and perhaps are watching this.
That's bullshit, but it's not bullshit.
When I was in Spain, I was told that he was this close to getting voted out of the club for all of his antics over the years.
And I'm not supposed to talk to anybody in the Hells Angels.
I'm out bad.
I'm at odds with them.
They're not allowed to talk to me.
I continue to get correspondence from Hills Angeles.
They ask me my opinion of things and what do you think about this?
And do you think we ought to do that?
And they wrote me and said, we're going to kick Sunny Barger out of the club.
What do you think?
And my response to them, whether it impacted them or didn't impact them,
my response to them was, that's the stupidest thing you guys could ever do.
I go, here's a guy you've followed for 63 years.
And now you're going to kick him out of the club because you think he's a clown.
I go, what kind of message is that to the outlaw bike culture?
I go, sit on your hands, man, and just let it go and don't give them a free reign.
And I, you know, that's what they ultimately did.
Did they have anything to do with George Christie?
I doubt it.
But I think, why didn't nobody kill him, though?
I don't know.
Maybe they were afraid.
Maybe, you know, killing, you know, saying, that's a very, and I don't mean this in a
district spoke away, but that's a cavalier statement.
Why don't somebody just kill him?
Well, if you think about, like, Paul Castellano would make the money and it would keep the money.
Right.
And then they're like, well, why aren't you sharing?
Why don't we get rid of it?
Even in a White House, but we got, so, you know, in business, it's like somebody saying,
why are you keeping 100% equity to company and why are you not sharing the equity?
But why are we not able to have a piece of this, right?
So to me, was he at least a guy that took care people financially?
Was he a guy that?
Sonny?
Sunny?
I don't think so.
Really?
I don't believe.
So, but look, you know, what you're saying is very valid.
But why did Paul Castellano wind up dead in front of Spark Steakhouse?
There's one reason why, and only one reason, John Gotti.
Because John Gotti had the balls to do it.
And imagine failing at killing John, excuse me, Paul Castellano.
Same thing with Sonny.
Somebody goes to Arizona to Sunny's house and they fail killing him.
I mean, you know, that's a pretty heavy...
If you fail?
If you fail.
If you're a professional, you're not going to fail.
You know, if you're in that space, you're not going to fail.
Because you guys were good at explosives.
You guys were...
It was a very different method.
By the way, how did you guys make money?
What was the business model of making money in Hell's Angels?
Well, look, my position has always been
let me back up.
The government's position has always been
the Hells Angels are a criminal organization.
My position has always been
the Hells Angels are not a criminal organization,
but I will concede it's an organization
with criminals in it.
Now, some of the guys are so greedy
that they've got these little side things going,
and they don't share them with the general membership.
They want the money for themselves.
Kenny Owens and I were friends.
Kenny Owens went to prison for 41 years.
He was a crank cooker.
In 1986, I was indicted by the FBI.
They said I ordered somebody's murder, and it was a government sting.
Ultimately, I spent a year in federal prison.
Ultimately, Barry Tarlow got me not guilty, and I beat the government, which is very difficult to do.
They got, what, a 98% conviction rate?
And I think that lost my train of thought.
I ask you a question.
How did you guys make money?
Yeah, okay.
So what happens is people doing their little things don't share it with people.
So I go to Kenny Owens and I say, Kenny, I got a big bill coming up.
This is an emissary goes to him because I'm in jail.
And I said, can you give me $10,000 to plight?
to my legal fees.
And he goes, George, I'd love to help you out,
but I'm broke.
And this is the message that comes back to me.
So, I don't know, six months later, three months later,
it's not very long.
The feds rate his house.
He's got $3 million and 30 pounds of crank.
So what's funny and ironic is he gets out of prison.
He gets sentenced to 41 years.
He does like 26 years, 27 years.
in the end of the 2008 or whatever,
he gets out, he gets paroled out,
and he's not allowed to be around the club,
but if you bring your motorcycle to him,
because he's got a motorcycle shop,
you can take your motorcycle.
The government can't deny him from making a living.
So I write up there,
I take my motorcycle there
and have him do some electrical work on it.
And he looks at me,
and I haven't seen him in years.
He was about that $10,000 short.
And it was, you know, that's the first thing he said to me.
We laughed about it.
But was that the way it was, or were there guys that would go out of their way to help you out?
Well, a lot of guys did help me out.
They did help you.
Yeah, and I think.
But what was the business model?
Like, I read one of the stories, like this guy named Josh Adams, you know, the 23-year-old, the airman who had the 700,000 volume and Vicodin pills.
And I don't know what it was.
I think it was closer to a million.
Million pills.
Yeah.
What is that story?
about. Well, my son and his friends had a friend that became an airman, and his job was he worked in the
pharmacy. And he had complete control over the ordering, the distribution. And my son, little George,
rest in peace, he's no longer with us. It's already here. Yeah, a great kid. Long time ago? Ten years
ago. He was 39 at the time. Was he in the life or no, he didn't go in. Oh, he was a hell's angel.
He was a hell's angel. He was a hell's angel. He, him and several of the, we called him the YGs, the young guys.
They were part of the new crew that joined the club in the mid-90s. They started bringing
and Vicodon into town and saturated the market. And you figure, what do you sell a Vicodon?
pill for. What did it cost? The government paid for it all. I mean, these guys were cutting the money up.
This is 80s. No, this is in 2009, 1999, 1999. 2000. So, 57, 56 people, 36 people got indicted.
And including myself, they said we were controlling the Vicodan market in Ventura County.
And, of course, it was a 59-count state racketeering charge, and it collapsed under its own weight.
I mean, it was a house and cards to begin with.
But they being my son, Adams, Rehugio Batillo, these various people, they were bringing the Viking into town.
You know how they got caught?
They were looking for business records.
they were doing a forensic analysis on me,
and they went to my ex-wife's house
to see if there were ledger books there
of my business practices.
And while they were there,
they found 30,000 Vicodon
in my son's wardrobe closet.
I didn't have a key to the house.
I had no dominion over the Vicodon
but they indicted my son.
They indicted my wife, who was a ex-wife,
who was a Canadian citizen in an effort to get me.
They were basically holding my family hostage.
At this point, are you somebody,
the feds are targeting together?
Yes.
Are you a big target?
Yes.
97.
I'm at the top of my game.
The rumor in law enforcement is Sunny's retired in Arizona,
George Christie's now.
Why does everybody retire?
Arizona Florida.
That's where the banana retired.
Yeah, what is it with Arizona?
Is that where you're going?
Is that where they give you annuities?
Is it like a benefit plan?
Well, you know, they have a special gangster retirement plan.
You know.
Special gangster retirement fund.
So, you know, where's Sammy the Bull?
Arizona.
Okay.
Yeah.
I'm being a smart ass.
Yeah, I know who you are.
I know.
So a million pills, let's say at the time.
And you know how they got caught?
They come into the house.
The 30,000 pills.
Yes, they come into the house, they find the 30,000.
What they fail to realize, they get so excited,
they stop the search for the ledger books,
and they focus on the pills.
In the garage is another 60,000 pills that they never discover
because these guys are so inexperienced,
and they just end the search.
They go, we found it, you know.
But you know how they got caught?
They didn't take the pills out of the bottles.
And the IBM codes were on the pills.
And one of the detectives went to the company, ran the codes.
And they go, oh, yeah, these are all going to Andrews Air Force Base out in the desert.
And that's how they put it all together.
At the time, pills are selling for, what, $2 to $8, black market?
I think they were selling, I think they averaged they told me they were paying 50.
50 cents a pill.
You guys were paying 50 cents.
Yeah.
And you got a really good deal on it.
Yeah.
And they were, uh, they were selling them, like you said, for five to $10.
Great margins, 10 times.
Yeah.
But then, so, okay.
So, by the way, it's, it's interesting because I'm earning.
You're thinking about going on the pharmacy business.
No, I actually, I had my best friend in the world.
There was a dentist that was illegally in Glendell selling bike it and pills to my best
friend's dealer, and I met with this dealer, told him he can never sell it to my friend again,
and he did, and my friend died, taking 50 pills from Vicodin.
And why did he take 50?
He didn't take 50.
He started off with one, left to two, led to three.
Okay, I got you.
He gradually worked with that.
The tolerance gets, yeah.
Oh, he was, he was a mess.
No matter how many Bible studies and stuff we would take this guy to, he was not going to get
off of it.
But, you know, let me say something.
I have two hip replacements.
So I go to USC.
They want to replace my hip.
Okay, replace my hip.
USCLA, USCLA.
USCLA.
So the procedures of success, the doctor tells me it's the worst hip I ever saw.
You know, I got in a bike wreck and it was already hammered from running every day.
I'm a jogger at that time.
I don't do it anymore because of the hip.
That's a, it can be problematic.
Yeah.
So I guess.
a hip replacement. What do they give me? They give me 150 Vicodin in this big bottle. And I said,
what do I do with these? He goes, eh, anytime you feel any pain, his exact words, pop a couple.
And so, you know, I didn't know they were going to string a man. You're right. That's where
the addiction comes from. Yeah. Yeah. I agree. And the doctors didn't realize it. This guy's a
professional doctor. I mean, he was paramount in discovering these hip replacements. He was on the
cutting edge of hip replacements. And, I mean, here's a doctor, world-renowned, winds up going to
another country and becoming the head of the hip replacement stuff there. He doesn't know they're
addicted. Nobody knew they were. They just, did they not know or did they not care? I mean, you know,
At the beginning, you don't know, but you've known for a while.
Yeah, they figure it out.
They don't know it's addicting.
You go to the dentist, they give it to you nowadays.
So I'm like, you know, take a couple of these.
Take a couple of these.
No, but my friend, it was a nasty situation
in what happened to, but going back to it.
How different was these biker gangs like Hell's Angels
versus the banana, the Gambino, the Colombo family?
Who was more ruthless?
Was it more you guys?
I think that this is what I'll say.
I have to define this.
In the mob, it's violence on violence.
The violence is on other members.
In the Outlaw Motorcycle Club, it's other people in the culture.
It's a little bit, I think it's a little bit spread out more.
But this is one of the things I tell people.
know, people will make comments to me, cavalier comments.
Oh, you know, the guy wound up getting killed.
What did he do?
Well, he informed on some people.
Well, I mean, everybody knows what the culture is about.
And I'm going to make a comment because you'll probably get some hate mail.
The club, they hate it when you call it gangs.
I mean, that's, you know, you describe it any way you want.
It doesn't.
Why, why is that?
They just don't want to be called a gang.
They want to be called a club.
They want to be called a club?
A club.
Is it because of a team?
tax benefit? Is it because of membership? It's because of a, in a courtroom, you get in a
courtroom. And this gang this, and this gang that, you know, one of the things in my last
2011 trial, you know, my daughter's, my attorney, and she was hammering the judge. I, you know,
I don't want them calling the hell's angels a gang in front of the jury. You don't want to or she doesn't
want to. She doesn't want to because it makes me look bad as her, uh, the judge.
client, you know, it paints a picture that I'm a bad guy. We hammered on that. That was one of the things we didn't want the jury exposed to. The other thing, which you might find really interesting, and I came up with this question, how many people on the jury watch Sons of Anarchy? And everybody's, you know, everybody, the whole room that was like a panel of 76 jurors and they're being drawn from. Everybody raised their hand. And as a
the jurors got interviewed, the next question was, do you believe that the leader knows what every
individual is doing and all the orders come from the top? And anybody that said, yes, we disqualify
him, you know. And what my daughter was trying to do was set up a mistrial. And the judge,
Judge Wu was smart enough to see what was happening.
And he insisted that we make a deal.
He goes, look, he told the U.S. attorney.
I was pretty brave for the judge.
He said, you know, you want this to be your career case.
And he goes, it's not.
You don't have that kind of case.
And I was sitting over there kind of thinking, oh, man, you know, I'm getting out of this one.
And he looked at me and he said, and you, Mr. Christie, he goes,
God only knows what you got away with the last 40 years.
He goes, I want you guys to go down there, make an agreement in Judge Walter's court and come back with a deal.
We went down there.
We came back.
We got an agreement.
We came back.
And we both walked in the courtroom, the prosecutors and the feds and my daughter and investigators and myself.
And Judge Wu said in an open court, he goes, well, he goes, obviously.
we've got an agreement because both sides
looked pissed off.
And that was his
That makes sense though. Yeah, absolutely.
That was his philosophy.
That both sides were mad
we probably got a decent
agreement. What were you guys against?
What was the Hells Angels against? Like for example,
you know how
when
I understand the enemy is Mongols
or the enemy is this or the enemy is that,
but what were some values? Like were you
pro-America? Were you, nobody,
body messes with it, because I know now it's international and that's all over the place.
But was there anything, a lot of former vets?
So what were you against?
What were you for?
Certainly patriotic Americans.
I mean, Trump recently himself said that Hells Angels were patriots.
You know, I don't know.
He believes the only president that would ever say that.
Yeah, I mean, you know.
Oh, sweet Joe's our patriot.
And I just, I was amazing, you know.
I want to say something.
You know, he went to that trial in New York.
Do you know, one of the people that showed up several times was Chuck Zito,
former New York, Hells Angel.
Wow.
Him and Trump apparently know each other.
And they showed up, but getting back on the subject were patriots.
A lot of veterans, the club was established from veterans.
I mean, I don't think at one time there were any non-veterans in the club.
I tried to create a rule that never really got off the ground.
I wanted to make it a automatic kickout if anybody was caught dealing with any terrorist
organizations, like selling, buying weapons, narcotics, information, whatever it would be.
And I don't know if it went over everybody's head or if people
weren't worried about it.
It just kind of stagnated and, you know, never got officially presented for a vote.
But I think, you know, all outlaw bike clubs are patriotic based in veterans' ex-military.
So, question for you.
Sometimes I watch how these people come from other countries here illegally.
Okay. And you saw like in Minnesota, you know, the Somalis, they're taking billions of dollars on top of billions of dollars. And they're going in the streets and punking Americans, okay, and bullying Americans.
They try to do the George Floyd protest in Huntington Beach. And I think you guys showed up. I don't know if you saw that or not. The biker came showed up. Yeah. Showed up.
This was recent. Recent. This is three years ago, four years. Whatever the time was, Rob, we can get the time to be faction. I was in Spain when all that took place.
You were in Spain when that happened.
And yeah. Where I'm going with this is, what, you know, the mob is no longer here.
It's here, but it's not the way it was here in the 50, 60. Yeah, it's not. They can't because
the business, you can't. How do you make money today? It's easy to catch you today.
There were families in New York that would say, what's happened in New York today, if the
mob was still around, it wouldn't be happening today. Because there was a code, they kept the streets
clean. And if, like you say, they killed each other, right? You said violence on violence.
different than, you know, Mongols and Hell's Angels and different bike clubs.
But how do you think if today you were still in there
and you're seeing America publicly going through what is going through in Minnesota?
How do you think you guys would have handled it?
Do you guys just stay out of it?
Were there moments where you guys got involved and say, hey, listen, we may be who we are,
but you don't cross the line and mess with America.
This is the greatest country.
Was there pride like that, or did you guys stay out of it?
Well, I think there was pride like that.
But, you know, when you start taking a political stance, it becomes very cloudy.
Where do you draw the line? What do you do?
You know, I mean, there are particular individuals that would kill for this country because they did before.
Do I promote it? I don't think so, you know. I think that, uh, I think that, uh,
This is a court, a society of checks and balances through courtrooms.
And you have to let the courts work their way, you know, wind their way.
I mean, otherwise you're going to, you know, it's like when I heard they were going to disband the police when I was in Spain.
I, you know, I just kind of chuckled.
I go, oh, that's great.
Yeah, disband the police and see who winds up running the country.
But, you know, these are hypothetical.
hypothetical situations, hypothetical answers, ideal in facts and reality of what I can do and what I can't do.
Maybe history, maybe history to see, you know, what things you guys played a positive role in.
Were there things that Hells Angels and Mongols played a positive role in?
Absolutely. I think if you were to really research the history of the Ventura,
area in the Ventura Hills Angels.
I saw the Ventura
Hells Angels as a benefit
to the community.
We ruled that town
with an iron hand.
We stopped drive-by shootings
in that town.
You weren't allowed to steal
motorcycles in that town. We had rules,
you know. You weren't allowed to cook
drugs in that town.
If you got caught cooking drugs,
you know, it was a problem.
Anybody. Anybody.
Yeah, including
Hells Angels. We had a Hells Angels that became an informant and actually wound up here in Florida
in the state of Florida. He was cooking drugs with a guy, and we found out. And I went to the guy,
and the guy was so scared. He told me, he goes, so-and-so gave me permission. And I said,
what are you talking about? He would not do that. And he goes, no, he gave me permission,
but I'm not allowed to talk about this.
So he threw another guy under the bus.
Yeah, he threw a Hells Angel under the bus.
Was he telling the truth or was he was lying?
The guy left, he got out of state.
And that's the guy that came here.
Yes.
So those are things, those are things, okay, interesting that you play some kind of a positive role on.
I mean, look, I'm going to say something else.
This is so funny.
We didn't even allow bicycles to be stolen in the town.
We had people coming to it.
us. The clubhouse
was like a
public courthouse,
if you will. People would come there and they
would decide
in that room. We would decide
in that room who was right, who was
wrong and we would say, okay,
this is how this is going to be. How was your relationship with cops?
Did they like you guys? The old cops liked
us. The new cops
said these guys need to
butt out of our business. This is our job.
Did you guys buy
the old cops or did you just, were
The military cops were solid as they come.
You know, I was very good friends with some of the cops,
and I'll tell you how we maintain my friendship with them,
is I never asked them to cross their line,
and they never asked me to cross my line.
And we had a great understanding, great relationship.
There's a couple of cops, and, you know, I don't care what people say.
You know, I got accused of being too friendly to the cops
when I was leader of the club, you know, probably for two or three decades.
I still, they text me.
Hey George, how you doing?
Yeah, I'm okay.
I mean, these are guys that were the chief, the assistant chief,
the cop Brad, the district attorney Michael Bradbury that came after me.
I had coffee with him in Ohio once.
I tried to get him on the history channel with me.
I said, let's go on the history channel and debate, you know.
And he declined at the last minute, but he was entertaining the thought for a while.
Were you guys buying politicians or no?
That was not your game.
Your game is not politicians, not buying cops, not buying judges.
No.
You know, we, and this sounds very cavalier and egotistical.
I mean, we didn't have to do anything.
Nobody messed with us in Ventura.
Ventura was our town, you know, locked, stock, and barrel.
You know, it's, we came to town in 1978, and if you come to town and you look
around, I could take you on a tour of the town. I could take you to the Ventura Clubhouse.
I could take you to the cross up on the hill where the police looked at us constantly and
surveilled us and gathered information. I can take you to the, I think it's the Star Lounge
on Main Street, where the other prominent-based motorcycle club,
the orphans were in town.
They were in town several years before us,
probably 10 years before us.
We fought it out with them
on Main Street in front of the bar.
The police rode up in their cars.
This will give you an idea of the time frame.
They had to roll their windows down by hand.
You can see them, and they're rolling the windows down.
And the message to me from the Ventura police,
these are the old-timers,
don't leave anybody in the street.
And roll the windows up,
They drove off and we continued fighting these guys.
We fought it out with the orphans on Main Street in Ventura.
How nasty was it?
It was nasty.
And two weeks later, mysteriously, their clubhouse burned down.
Mysteriously.
Yes.
Stuff like that happens.
Yeah, it does happen.
Yeah.
And spontaneous combustionism.
So they come back.
The police come to the fire.
Yeah.
And the fire department comes.
And what do they do?
These guys do not like the orphans.
They sit in front of the orphans clubhouse and smoke cigarettes and drink coffee while it burns to the ground.
And you can go there to this day.
And you can look on the walls, on the back wall, and you can still see the smoke and flame marks from the fire.
From, I don't know what year it was, 78, 77, 78.
What's the nastiest war you were a part of?
Well, you know, I think that the war with the outlaws, I mean, it was down and dirty, you know, whiskey George and riverboat, you know, they get tied up, chained up, get shot in the back of the head with shotguns and probably pistols.
They get thrown in the rock quarry and, you know, we're calling the outlaws this before the war.
what happened to river boat and whiskey you know i don't know man they left to go home you know and then
they float to the surface and uh it just from there it escalates and escalates and you know i
i lost count of how many people got killed over the years uh it got so uh rough a motorcycle tank
was left on one of the
outlaws front porches
and it was his birthday
and this is, you know, getting into
sophistication here.
It was his birthday. He walked out,
he saw it, he thought it was a gift,
he picked it up, and it blew both his arms
off. You know, it was a bomb.
I mean, this stuff's all documented.
I'm not just making it up.
I say that was the dirtiest one.
I, you know, I met with Taco,
Harry Bowman,
He died in prison in 2019.
He tried to get a compassionate leave.
He was dying of cancer.
They hated him so much.
They would not...
They wouldn't parole him.
Harry Taco Bowman.
Harry Taco Bowman.
Look up the United States of America
versus Harry Bowman,
and you'll see he put a murder contract on me.
Harry Bowman.
Harry Bowman.
He came to Ventura twice to kill me.
and he wound up going to jail for racketeering,
and he got an additional 10 years for,
there's Harry right there,
and got an additional 10 years for ordering my murder.
Did you guys ever meet?
Yeah, I met him in person a couple times.
Has he ever a friend, or no?
Well, we had an interesting relationship.
We were at war.
I went to him, petitioned him,
peace, a very unpopular position with the outlaws, a very unpopular position with Hells Angels,
but I continued, Harry Bowman went along with it, dug in kind of, and ultimately Spike O'Neill
in the mid-19, 1995, 96, I don't know what year it was, talked Bowman into.
backing out of the peace talks and putting a murder contract on me.
They were either going to kill Sonny or me.
They decided ultimately to kill me.
In 2002, I received a phone call from a federal prison, and it's Harry Bowman.
Taco.
Taco.
He calls me on the phone, and he wants to ask me a favor.
And he said, you know, George, he goes,
this is basically your second case you beat.
You beat that 59 count state racketeering case.
You beat that case in 86.
He goes, I don't know what your secret is,
but he goes, my lawyer is interested in talking to your daughter
and find out how you're fighting these cases.
He said, would you be interested in helping me out?
And I thought about it.
I was thinking the balls on that.
guy.
Called you.
Yeah, he called me, had put a murder contract on me, convicted of it.
He knows it, you know it, you know it.
Yeah, he knows.
And he, you know, he said, you know, about that murder thing, man, it was, you know,
it wasn't personal, you know.
And I said, well, I know that, you know.
I mean, what else are you going to say?
I mean, we're supposed to be tough guys, you know.
But he says, will your daughter help me in her, she called Henry Gonzalez,
a very prominent attorney in Florida that was working.
on tacos appeal and they worked together on it a little bit unsuccessfully I might add but as
Harry and I were talking on the phone I said hey before you get out the phone taco I need to ask you
something he goes oh yeah what's that and he said what do you want you know he I could tell by his voice
he knew I was going to say something to him and I said look I know you got rack of
tearing and you got a life sentence on that and I said I know you got an additional 10 years for
ordering my murder I said what are you going to do first and he told me to go to hell he did yeah he was
joking but uh harry bowman interesting guy who's on the FBI's uh is he dead is he alive he's dead
he's dead 2019 yeah he uh he ruled that club with an iron hand he was the ultimate leader international leader
the final say, and that's what got him on the racketeering.
Their club is structured somewhat like the mafia.
Our Hells Angels' charters are autonomous to each other.
That's how we beat that 1979-1980 RICO case.
Are you familiar with that?
You know who was a prosecutor?
Robert Mueller.
Stop it.
Robert Mueller.
Robert Mueller tried us twice and failed.
And Judge Conti and him decided,
Robert Mueller.
There you go right there.
Robert Mueller was prosecuted in 1980
Major Rico case.
That's against the Hells Angels motorcycle
leading to two lengthy trials that ended mistrials.
Due to problematic government witness
and defense argument. Wow.
Wow.
Yeah, this is where you were arguing against Sunny
to say let's do less empire,
let's do more decentralized, independent.
So we won't be held towards Rico law.
They can't racketeer.
No racketeering.
Right.
And, you know, Sunny liked, look, I'm going to be candid with you.
You know, somebody says, hey, there's Sunny Bardser.
Or, hey, there's George Christie.
This guy's really powerful in the Los Angeles.
It's really an ego blast, you know.
What kind of money are you guys making?
Are you guys making money?
Well, there were times I was making money, but I got to tell you something.
By the early 90s, I had a bail bonds company.
I had a T-shirt company.
I had a tattoo shop.
I had a concert promotion business.
And I was administrator for my daughter's law office.
I mean, I was a real entrepreneur, you know, as you are yourself.
And so I found that I could make a lot more money legally without the
scrutiny, but the interesting thing is the scrutiny never stopped.
You know, they're always looking at an angle.
You know, there was rumors floating around the internet for a while.
I had $35 million hidden in an offshore account.
Would you mind sharing the address with the audience?
Well, my ex-wife would like to know that as well.
My ex-wife would like to know.
She actually called me, and she said, what about this?
Wow.
Bold like taco.
Maybe worse.
Really?
But anyways.
Is Noel still alive?
Noel?
Yeah, Noel's alive.
I think Zerana's alive.
Zee, Sonny's, you know, those are Sonny's women.
I have nothing to do with Sonny.
No, what I'm asking is, does your ex-wife, Noel and Z, do they talk?
Are they friends?
No, no.
They were not friends.
They were not friends.
No, isolated.
My ex-wife knew Z, they,
It was interesting.
It was like the kettle calling the pop black.
That's how they perceived each other, if you will.
Wow. And that's what I'll say on that.
Who was you? Did you say it once or I don't know who said it that?
Sonny one time hit his wife and his daughter or something like that.
Yeah, he did.
He has a, if you look it up, he's got a salt beef against Noel.
And I believe the daughter's name was Sarah.
His 14. Noel's daughter or his daughter?
Noel's daughter.
Noelle's daughter.
Sonny doesn't have any children.
He has one sibling, a sister.
But...
He didn't want to have kids?
I don't know.
I think he was a pretty selfish guy.
I think he was interested himself.
Was he straight?
Was he only into women?
I think so.
Okay, you think so.
Well, that's good.
At least you think so.
I saw no...
No, I'm just wondering,
because, you know, if you don't want kids, you know, it's a,
could be different for everybody.
Yeah, you know, look.
When guys see.
And let me tell, let me say something, because I'm going to, the, the Sunny supporters
are going to go, you know, he would never be saying, you know,
everything I said today, I said to Sunny's face at one time or another, you know,
we had an ultimate showdown in the Oakland Clubhouse.
He was a, a cave creek member.
I was a
Bintura member
we were resolving
an issue
he called 911
which is against the club rules
you can certainly
call 911 for an ambulance
but he called 911 and then
the police took the call over
and he made a bunch of provocative
cavalier statements
about
no well
I took exception
to that because the club took exception to that.
They wanted him
corralled in, if you will.
And
Papa
was a
very powerful Frisco
San Francisco member. When I say Frisco, I'm talking
about San Francisco. Frisco member
who ultimately would get
murdered by the Mongols. But
he hosted a meeting between me
and Sonny, and Sunny and I went in the back
room. What year?
I'm going to say 2007.
At this point, there is major issues between the two of you.
Yeah, this is the final straw.
We're reaching the end.
And I said, you're wrong.
I go, members have been kicked out for that.
I go, you need to admit it to the club.
And he basically, I said, look, we've been arguing two hours.
I said, we're not getting anywhere.
I said, how about this?
I go, how about we agree that you're going to think,
I'm wrong.
I'm going to think you're wrong.
And I said, but let's do this.
Let's go out to the,
there was like probably 20 presidents
sitting in the other room.
I said, let's go out to the meeting
and let's tell them
the issue's resolved
and it's put behind us.
So there's no more questions about it.
And he said,
me, go out in the meeting.
He goes, I'm Sonny Barger.
I don't answer to anybody.
And that's what he told me.
And I said, look, Sunny,
I said, you got me
all wrong, man. You think I'm after you. I said, I'm not after you. I said, my vision of
Sunny Barger is, Sunny Barger is standing in the front, George Christie on your right shoulder,
and Irish old Farrell on your left shoulder. And I said, do you remember up in Shasta when the cops
were threatened to rush the camp because somebody had ditched him on their bike and rode in the camp?
And you told them that if they came in, it was going to be a goddamn riot. And I said,
that's a Sunny Barger. I remember. And that's a Sunny Barger I always want to remember.
Now, I may have my timeline wrong, you know.
Shortly after that, that book, Angels of Death came out.
07.
Yeah, he told me, he said, yeah, so Angels of Death argument.
So he calls me up on the phone, and he said, you know what, George?
I read that book, and he goes, you look really bad in it.
And I go, I look really bad.
And I said, like I'm trying to impress somebody.
And I said, well, you know what?
I go, you don't look so good yourself because I'd read the book and whatnot.
And he goes, and I'm going to tell you something else.
He goes, I think you've been president too long in Ventura.
And he goes, you need to step down.
And he goes, nobody likes you.
And I said, well, you know what, man?
I don't know how this sounds to you, but I said,
I don't really care what you think anymore.
And he hung up on me.
And I like a couple of kids.
this is the last time I talked to
I called him back
and I said hey Ralph
I said we got cut off
and he hadn't cut me off
he had hung up on me
and he said no George
I huh and I slammed the phone
down on him
just to make sure you're the last one
yeah I had to get the last word
and that's the last time we talked
when I talk to guys from the
the world
they'll say there's a group that'll say
you got kicked out there's a group that says
you quit.
Me?
Yeah.
I quit.
You quit.
I absolutely quit.
How did it happen?
I went to the meeting.
We were fighting the outlaws, the Mongols, the banditos, and the pagans.
And I said, look, we got wars, I think five fronts, not to mention law enforcement.
I go, now you guys want to fight the Vagos.
I go, why do you want to do that?
I go, the Vagos are calling me.
they're telling me, hey, George, we don't want to fight you guys. What's the problem, man?
We've gotten along since 1966. Why now? What's the issue? And I told the guys in the club,
I go, you know, when somebody doesn't want to fight you and you continue to push on them,
that makes you a bully. And I go, I'm not a bully. I've never been a bully. I never will be a bully.
And I said, we have become the people we rebelled against. And I said,
I'm done, man.
And I said, what's going to happen next?
I said, read your history.
What happens is when empires or cultures or whatever you,
however you want to describe it, run out of people to fight,
they turn inward.
And I go, that's what's going to happen to us.
And I said, I don't want to be here when that happens.
Took my patch off.
I folded it up.
I put it on the table.
I said, anybody got anything to say?
Nobody said anything.
I said, what's my status going to be?
And they said, good standing.
Well, you know, Sunny changed all that.
They put me out to bad stand.
Who's in that room?
Who's in that room when you're saying this?
Ventura Hell's Angels.
Sunny's not there.
Ventura Hells Angels.
Got it.
Okay, so now what happens is...
This is 2011 or this is 2011?
2011.
So what happens is I make this prediction.
And I'm going to jump ahead and then I'm going to swing back.
I make this prediction.
Several months later, Jethro Pettigrew, the president of San Jose,
gets murdered by Vago in a Reno, it's a Reno Casino.
So there's a big funeral. There's five to seven thousand guests there.
Two Hells Angels start arguing at the funeral. They're holding each other responsible. It was your fault,
Jethro got killed. No, it was your fault.
Steve Tawson
has just an
amazing reputation as
probably one of the toughest guys in the Hells Angels.
He's actually
killed somebody by hitting them
with one punch.
Tough guy. Yeah, very tough guy.
He hit a guy. He was a bouncer
at a bar called the Pink Poodle
and he hit a guy and one
punch killed him.
So Steve Ruiz
and Steve Tawson are now arguing.
They're both San Jose Hills Angels or Santa Cruz Hells Angels.
They might have broke off.
I can't remember.
Steve says it's your fault.
Jethro's dead.
Steve Tosson hits Ruas.
Ruas falls to the ground,
pulls his gun out and shoot Steve Tawson three times,
murders him in front of all those witnesses.
It's complete chaos going on.
Tosson lays there dead.
police come. Steve Ruiz gets away. They continue with the burial. And the day or two later,
they exhume Jethro's body because they think Steve Ruis was also killed and he's in the ground.
That never happened. Ultimately, three or four months later, Steve Rulis turned himself in and wound up.
I think he got three years for shooting Jethro. But what happened was,
Everything I predicted happened.
And I'm not happy it happened, but it's a fact.
It happened.
And, you know, history is history.
You can't rewrite it.
And that's the problem I had.
Sunny and the small crew of Ventura guys that didn't like me wanted to rewrite history.
They wanted to say they kicked me out of the club.
Well, you know what?
They didn't kick me out of the club.
I was told I can't write a book.
I was told I couldn't do the Outlaw Chronicles.
I was told I can't go on A&E and do shows.
I've written four books.
I've done, I lost count of all the shows I've done,
and you know what?
I'm still doing what I want.
Has anybody tried to take you out or no?
I don't know.
But you haven't gotten any threats.
Well, sure.
There were some threats.
People write me and, you know.
I mean, I had one guy stooped so low when my boy died,
he wrote me and said, you know, he killed your son,
which is complete bullshit, you know.
He died from complications from undiagnosed diabetes.
he died in his sleep.
But I said to him, I said, you know,
I said, you only, with your remarks,
I go, you only reinforce
the fact that my position
was correct in leaving an organization.
Wow.
You got a problem, man.
Come and see me.
You know where I live?
I live in Ventura.
You're still in Ventura.
I'm still in Ventura.
And I go out every day
and I'm not challenging anybody.
And Hells Angel is still in Ventura.
They're not as active as they
were and I don't think, and they're not going to like this, but I'm going to say it
public, I don't think they're as powerful as they were. And they've become a footnote, perhaps.
And you know what? I got no problems with you guys, but don't make one, okay? I'm just trying
to live my life. And I'm happily married, married to a woman. I've known since I was 12.
She was married to a friend of mine for 57 years, and he passed away, and I figured I'd better step in.
What a crazy story before anybody.
Stories get crazy, isn't crazy.
Yeah, and she was a witness in my 1986 trial.
She was a character witness in my 1986 murder-for-hire trial, and she wreaked nothing but havoc from the feds.
They froze her bank account.
They put her stored under surveillance, and they were in the...
investigating her clients.
Well, at least she got the $35 million, which is good.
She's getting...
She's getting...
She's getting the benefit of the $35 million.
And we're living it up.
Whether real or imagine...
So we close with that?
Yeah, I like that right there.
By the way, a final thing before we wrap up.
How long were you in with Michael, Francis?
We were... I was there almost a year with him.
He had done that gas scam.
The Russian thing.
Yeah, yeah. How much
10 billion? He was saying it was making
4 to 10 million a week. Yeah, yeah.
And
they wanted the money back.
Well, they wanted the money.
And I think he took them on a little bit wild
goose chase. I don't know if he admitted that to you
when he talked about it. He took them on a wild goose chase
and after about eight months, they figured out,
you know, I think he was getting taken here in the limousine
and he was staying at this motel and the money was coming.
And he kept telling him, it's kind of like the checks in the mail.
Michael is brilliant.
Yeah, he's absolutely brilliant.
Brilliant.
Who else was in with you guys?
Rosario Gambino.
He was the pizza connection guy.
Rosario Gambino.
Yeah, he was the pizza connection.
I was in there with some, I don't remember their names, some other guys.
I was in there with the guy that was the first name in the infamous black book out of Vegas.
He had thrown acid in somebody's face.
somebody who owed a debt to
the casino
and he went to collect it
and...
Is it Frank Collada?
I don't know.
But he was a part of the mob?
Well, he was part of Chicago.
Frank Collato.
Spallatra?
No, but I met Tony Spillotro.
But I didn't...
He wasn't in jail with me.
Sam Serentino was in jail.
Frank Collada, you would have remembered.
He was an ice cold.
Ice cold guy.
He was in the movie casino.
He's the guy that put the head in the vice.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I know who he is.
So I go to Vegas,
1976, 77,
make reservations at the Riviera Hotel.
Old man John tells me,
don't stop in Vegas, man.
He goes, keep going.
We're going to Cody White.
I go, the guys want to stop, man.
I never have been there before.
So we stop in Vegas.
We go to the Riviera,
and they start hassling me about the reservations.
So I demand.
I said, I'm paid for these.
You've taken it off my credit card.
I go, we're going to stay here, one way or another.
And some guy shows up there, little guy,
didn't know who it was, didn't remember his name.
And then when I saw the movie at Casino,
I realized it was Tony Spilatro that they had sent down there
to tell us to get out of town.
He was really rude, really aggressive.
He goes, you know, guys,
did he go on those bikes and get out of town.
And I said, look, man, don't disrespect.
I don't know who you are.
You don't know who I am.
I said, we're going to spend the night here.
And then in the morning, we'll get on our bikes and we'll get out of town.
I go, we're going to Cody, Wyoming, man.
I have no interest in Las Vegas.
I go, you say it's your town?
It's your town.
And him and I wound up spending the evening together.
Seriously?
I'm totally serious.
What was he?
What was he like?
Very serious.
By when did you know it's Tony Spolatra?
And when the movie casino came out.
So while you're calling him Tony, but you don't know which Tony was.
No, I don't know who he is.
Tony Spalacharo, nobody knew who he was back down.
I mean, these are mob guys that, you know.
What year is this?
1977.
That makes sense.
Yeah.
So this is a story I told at the Mop Museum.
I gave a lecture at the Mop Museum once.
Beautiful place, by the way they've done it is incredible.
Yeah, it's brilliant.
It's in the Old Vegas, which is like the river.
And that's the courthouse.
Yes, the courthouse, yeah.
David Chessonoff handled our,
2002
casino
the fight with the Mongols
who was partners with
his name escapes me
the ex-mayor.
Yeah, Oscar Goodman.
Oscar Goodman. He's partnered with him.
Have you spent time with him? I've talked to...
You know, his wife's the mayor now.
I know she is. He was in for eight or 12
and she was in for eight or 12.
Yeah. Is she still a mayor?
Can you check to see if Oscar Goodman's
still the mayor? Maybe she's not.
David Chesonoff was his understudy,
Goodman's understudy.
And he was in the movie, Casino.
Yeah, Goodman was in the...
He was with Smolato.
Yeah, yeah.
But that was exactly...
Joe Pessy nailed it.
That's exactly how he was.
You can see from the...
He taught me how to play craps.
Tony.
Tony.
He says, let's play some craps.
I don't know how to play craps.
And he goes, come here, I'll show you.
And he was doing all these sophisticated betting.
I think they were letting me win.
You know?
I had a bunch of dough.
And he had his eye on one of the girls that was with us.
But she was with a member.
But he was a character, man.
Tony Spalatro was a character.
I did an interview with Tony Spalatra's hitman, Frank Collada.
If you type in Frank Collada, yeah, that's Tony.
But if you go to Frank Collada,
Calada passed away three years ago.
He texted me, and then two months later he passed away.
when Frank Clotta came to do an interview with him.
He killed him in the house, though,
and then took him to the Gordonfield, did he say?
Yeah, that's, well, he told a lot of stories.
He were together for a couple hours.
But this guy, when he came in, George, he comes in,
and Mario, he says, hey, how are you?
He says, why did you come in a white car?
Mori's like, no, he didn't.
He says, no, you did.
You came in a white car with three people.
Where are the other three guys?
he realized it. What's this guy talking? And then he realizes
they did come earlier in a while. Frank
was sitting outside the entire time watching
every single move to see if he was safe or not.
Well, yeah, I mean, these guys were serious
about him. I mean, you know,
he didn't like the term rat.
Who?
Calada. He got an argument with...
So you know Calada. I didn't really know him, but
I know on the set of casino
somebody called him a rat.
Yeah. And he took him aside,
apparently took him aside
put him in his place.
Yeah, I said, don't ever call me a rat again.
No, this was not a guy.
You felt how cold he was.
Well, he plays one of the hitmen.
They kill that guy when they're getting rid of all the...
Let me go back now.
My first lawyer for my 1886 case was Norm Green and Alan Kaplan.
they did the Stardust Skimming case.
And you're familiar with the circus?
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's the casino.
That's your lawyer.
They were your lawyers.
Yeah.
And they, we had given Alan Kaplan a motorcycle to Cleveland guys, gave him a motorcycle.
He got in a wreck and they amputated his foot.
And he couldn't, he was in no shape to defend me.
and the case was turned over to Barry Tarlow.
But initially it was Norm Green and Alan Kaplan.
Alan did the Pizza Connection case with Rosario Gambino, who was there.
So I get subpoenaed to a grand jury about Teamster money
because we paid Allen $10,000 as a retainer,
and they wanted to know
if it had anything to do with Teamster money.
I didn't go to the grand jury.
My father died unexpectedly.
The day I was supposed to testify at the grand jury,
and they excused me.
The Ventura police had to call the U.S. attorney
that was asking the questions at the grand jury.
Did his dad really die or is he just tell the stories?
And he said, no, his dad did die.
And they told me, we'll catch you next time.
I never heard back from him.
Wow.
George, who do people say you look like?
I want you to look at this real quick when I say this.
Who do people say you look like?
I don't know.
Did they say it look like anybody?
I don't know.
Rob, who's he look like?
Does he not look like John Voight?
Wow.
Go up to John Boyd.
John Boyd's a good-looking man.
Go to John Boyd.
Go to different pictures like straight looking at you.
I don't know.
No, I got a great.
a great story.
You look like John Boyd.
Okay.
That is that him?
If she says it, she's known
you since 12.
You look like John Voight.
Okay.
Well, you know.
People don't tell me I look like John Boy.
That's a compliment.
You know, John is a, you know,
you know what movie I think about when I think about John Boy?
Heat?
Champ.
Champ.
Champ.
Old school.
That's the movie my dad and I would watch,
the horses and, you know.
So we're having the 50th anniversary.
You'll never guess who shows up in 10.
Who?
John Voight's daughter.
Which one?
Angelina?
She's with Chuck Zito.
Okay.
So her and Chuck and I are walking up the street.
This is what year?
99 or 98.
50th anniversary.
Peak.
She looks gorgeous.
Yeah.
So she's very,
there's Chuck and Angela.
So the cops are focusing on Chuck.
I mean,
I mean, they see me every year.
day. But here's Chuck Zito.
And they're like,
I think they're sneaking pictures of them and they're
asking questions and they're starstruck
with Chuck.
And in between Chuck and I is
Angelina Jolie. And they were so excited
about Chuck. They didn't even
pick up on who she was.
So the next, after the party's
over, I tell the cops, they were the gang
squad guys. And I go, and you guys are slipping.
And they go, what do you mean? I go, didn't you
recognize who was in between us? And I go,
no, who was it? And I said, Angelina
and Jolie, man.
And they were just like...
You said John Boyd's daughter.
Right.
To the average person, it's Angelina Jolie's dad.
Dad, okay.
But 40 years ago, it was John Boy.
30 years ago, it was John Boy.
Look, you remember him in Heat?
Of course.
That was just an incredible movie.
And, you know, Michael Mann is an incredible filmmaker.
And you want one more short story?
Sure.
In 1986, 87, I beat my case.
Nobody beats the feds.
You know, it was a big deal, man.
Michael Mann called me up,
and he wants to talk to him about doing a movie
about carrying the torch and my trial.
And my first wife...
This is in 1984 Olympics, the torch thing that you did,
$3,000.
Yeah.
What a funny store.
Pretty good move, huh?
What a funny story?
Talk about controlling narrative.
You're like charity, man.
I was controlling the narrative, man.
And so I said my first wife, Cheryl, who my present wife, Beverly, they were best friends.
They were really good friends.
How many wives have you?
Three.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
Sonny holds a record, man.
How many did Sonia?
Four.
Son had four wives.
Four wives.
I'm being a smart ass now.
I'm not talking shit about it.
There's a great picture of...
This is you in the middle.
That's me in the middle.
That's sunny after surgery.
That's Irish O'Farrell, a very imposing figure.
Very.
It looks like Kurt Russell.
Yeah, he's one of the, was one of the toughest Greek fighters.
He was, really?
Yeah.
So he was a tough guy.
Now, back out of the picture a little bit, you see the little eyeballs at the bottom?
Yes.
That's Little George.
That's my son, little George.
It later became controlling the little.
He, a Vicod and market, he was a hell of a pharmacist.
And that's Sunny to the right, to your left.
Yes.
Irish, you said Irish?
Irish O'Farrell.
Michael, Irish O'Farrell.
Michael, Irish, most Irish tougher than Sunny?
Yeah, yeah.
Look, do you ever heard of the beast from the east?
No.
Okay, now, Chuck Zito and I have a difference of opinion on this.
But look up Big Vinny, the beast from the east.
Big Vinny?
Yeah, Big Vinny, the Beast from the East.
You have a guy that would like that name.
There's Big Vinny.
Okay, Big Vinny and Irish got in a fight.
And Chuck says that the Oakland Charter jumped on Big Vinny.
I was told that Irish took down Big Vinny,
one single-handed you know they they fought in the backyard of the oakland clubhouse uh that's where
i was totally fought chuck zito said no they fought at uh irish's house uh then he died several weeks
later he had a ruptured spleen stop it from the fight yeah well that's what they say so irish
irish is a bad destroy them yeah and irish was killed by the aryan brotherhood
which is very shady circumstances.
But Irish and this Aryan Brotherhood guy got in an argument.
They walked.
The guy says, let's go outside and we'll snort some crank.
And we'll put this behind us.
So Irish said, okay, so Irish walked out first.
The guy stabbed him in the neck three or four times.
And then Irish looked at him and said, what are you going to do now?
And he shot him four times and killed Irish there on the spot.
You were close with Irish?
Very close.
So would you and Irish be against Sunday?
Like were you guys united?
No, we were united with it.
But, you know, we, I told Irish, I go, this guy's not turning over the club to us.
I mean, see, what happens is somebody, you know, gives the power up.
How do they get it back?
If the people they gave it to are still alive, they're never getting their power back.
They've got to get rid of you.
and
Sonny had a
revelation
I'm not going to die after all
what am I going to do now
I'm going to start
a movement to get my power back
and that's when he went to Arizona
that's when did Irish die
what year?
89 or
oh okay
so early or on
when they both went to prison
Irish is supposed to go to prison with him
and Aryan brothers
got him right before
yeah yeah wow
Well, George, I can talk to you for hours.
And every time I'm like, I'm getting text me, you got a meeting.
You got a meeting.
I'm just getting more and more interested here.
But George, appreciate you for coming out.
This was fantastic.
Well, maybe we'll talk again sometime.
I definitely look forward to it.
I definitely look forward to it.
This was great.
Is there anything you want the audience to go to?
Is there a book?
Is there anywhere you want them to go to?
Go to my website, georgecristy.com.
I got a new book and a challenge coin.
I created this challenge coin that the Roman soldiers use challenge coin.
I trace this back. The Roman soldiers used to use challenge coins so they could identify themselves as being part of the Roman legions.
And I've putting out a challenge coin with the book. I think it's going to be my last book. I shouldn't say that.
It's going to be my last book as a memoir of the Hells Angels. I think I said it all in this book. I worked on it three years.
I got a phone call, said, hey, you and son are going to resolve your problems. You need to come.
call him because he's not going to last much longer.
I got up. I started drinking coffee.
I told Beverly, I can't sleep. I got up. I went out in the front room, and I started writing
the book. And at the end of the book, I explained, it's really kind of an insight into
the leadership of being a leader in the outlaw motorcycle world and, you know, make a lot of
comparisons and at the end I reveal why I decided not to come back and why I wouldn't come back,
but I'm not going to tell you that.
I got to wait for it.
Well, maybe I'll send you a book.
I appreciate that.
George, thank you so much.
My pleasure.
Pleasure.
Great having you here.
Guys, take care, everybody.
If you want to learn more, go visit his website, georgechristy.com.
God bless.
Bye-bye.
When we set out to create a shoe that blends comfort, function.
and luxury. We had the choice to make it fast. We had the choice to make it cheap. We chose
neither. Instead, we chose Tuscanyir. We chose true Italian craftsmanship. Each pair touched by 50 skilled
pants. We chose patience, spending two years perfecting every detail, and we chose the finest quality
at every step, introducing the Future Looks Bright collection. Not rushed, not disposable, not ordinary.
rather intentional, luxurious, timeless.
